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PAGE SIX
DAILY TIMEt-KNTIRPRIM. THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 2, 1922.
H. GOLDSTEIN’S
SPECIALS FOR 10 DAYS ONLY
Men’s Overcoats, at
$4.98
Ladies’ $25.00 Coats at
$16.75
Ladies’ Suits, at
$9.90
Baby Blankets, pair
49c
Chiffon Broadcloth, 54-inch, yd.
$2.79
54-inch Prunella Skirting, yd
$2.95
54-inch Storm Serge yd.
$1.39
H. GOLDSTEIN’S
YOU OUGHT TO BE ASHAMED
Dyeing
Dyeing
Dyeing
WE DYE TO LIVE—
Send us your Cleaning and Pressing. All
work guaranteed. Ladies’ work a specialty.
We are now in position to do all kinds of
tailoring 'coat-lining, ets.
Troy Tailoring Co.
Phone 43
205 West Jackson Street
If you have recently recovered your shingle roof
without dipping the shingles with—
PEE-GEE
SHINGLE STAIN
it is still NOT TOO LATE to correct your mis
take.
A brush coat or two of stain or—
Pcc-Gcc Roof Paint
In red, gray or green will give wonderful returns
on a small investment* ::::::
Your roof if neglected requires the heaviest upkeep
expense of any part of your home. THEN WHY
NEGLECT? :::::::
Robison Hdw. Co.
117-119 E. Jackson St. Phone 168
(By W. T. Anderson In the Macon
Telegraph)
Have you any ills? Any of your famt
ly or loved ones affected? Got any
rheumatism, flat feet, constitpatlon,
tuberculosis, weakened, run-down con
dition? Suffer with excessive tired
feeling after slight exertion? Does
your back hurt? Got diabetes, Bright’i
disease or other kidney trouble? Have
spots before your eyes? Got any fill
ings in your teeth? Children got any?
What are you doing about It?
.Taking medicine? Yes? Well, you
should be ashamed.
You thought this was an advertise
ment for medicine that pretended to
cure-all, didn’t you? And you
wondered what this new remedy was
that had been brought out on the front
j>age of the Telegraph. Well, listen:
Look about you, and see If you can
Jind a perfect specimen of the human
family. Is there one? Examine the
child even as early as six years old,
and there are many of these with
fillings In their teeth. And fillings
are all right when cavities develop—
but wbat makes cavities? Are you
doing anything to prevent others, ot
indifferent to them? What
cessive prices, we buy chemicals to
place in our stomachs to endeavor to
restore the balance—to overcome the
condition of acidosis that has been es
tablished in our blood and which is
destroying our kidneys in their enfev-
ered effort to eliminate the acids and
poisons as rapidly as we can gorge
them into our stomachs.
Alfred W. McCann says all the lore
of all the world’s libraries cannot ex
plained the mystery of the food con
tained in a grain of wheat or a drop ot
/nllk. Yet, If we want bread from
wheat, we must have the whitest,
starchiest extract from wheat that it
possible to mill, and then It must be
bleached or “bled white,” as McCann
ve won’t buy it. The miller
must take all the life out of flour bo
fore he can sell it to us. This starchy
substance, placed In the stomach, is
Immediately converted into sugar, and
put of sugar acid is produced, and that
js pumped into the blood, and. presto!
Away we run to the drug store, the
dentist, the doctor and the hospital
and get patched up, while we continue
dig away at the foundation of our
Godly house by extracting from it all
the natural foods given us by our
produces the thousand and one ills ol Maker «nd «* tln S «»• concentrated
the human family? Do you know?
Y»ry likely, because the wherefore is
well-known to nearly every person.
The dentist will tell you that
cavities in your teeth are due to
pesslve acid In the mouth . The doctor
will tell you that your rheumatism
excessive acid In the blood. He
will tell you the same thing about
nearly all your ills.
And yet, how much thought,
tention do we pay to correcting this
condition In our blood, starting at
foundation of nearly all of our
eases? Nothing? I repeat that
should be ashamed.
The scientists and food experts
argue that we are eating food that
Is producing all the acid in our blood,
and that If we would use a little mule
sense—not even horse sense, nor hu-
but mule sense—we could
close up halt our drug stores, put 59
it of the doctors and dentists
payrolls and close up half our
hospitals.
No. It is not any complicated system
of diet that in being discussed. The
silliest rot in the world is to read in
jnagazines where this or that fakir
will send you for $5 a list of food*
(hat you may eat for each meal that
that trouble, will re
duce your weight or add to It.
food for every living thing I
When we want milk, we demand
cream—butter-fat—making more work
for the kidneys. When we want sugar,
Instead of getting it out of fruits and
vegetables, we eat the concentrates,
such as candy and syrup and granulat
ed sugar. If we eat an apple we take
off the peeling and throw it away,
eating the concentrate. If we want
bread we taken off the bran husk ot
the wheat, tear out the heart of the
wheat and eat the starchy content
Mr. McCann says a man can be nor
mal and healthy beyond any present-
4ay contemplation by eating whole
wheat and whole milk—theso two
foods alone containing all that his
body needs for sustenance for auy
kind of labor. Talking about the high
cost of living, the manner of living is
expensive and is killing the race. But
It is not necessary for a man, to be
in perfect health and free from disease
and practically Immune from Illness,
for him to have meats and potatoes
and cream and butter. And If he will
portion of whole wheat at each
meal, he cannot find appetite nor
for the acid-producing foods with
which be is afflicting his body.
We should be ashamed of our abuse
our bodies. Intelligence was given
i for the upbuilding of the race and
„ wir ihe '" !,,tr,,c " 0 ” oi **■
only one in the long list of creatures
that has profaned his Maker and dem
onstrated his unworthiness by degen-
■ating the marvelous, perfect body
with which ho was endowed. Where
the righteous claims to the boast
that man is made In the Image of his
Maker—the present-day man?
limping, complaining, bloated,
halt, blind pervert—and why? Be
lt the scientists are to be be
lieved—and they are—man hasn’t the
intelligence to eat the food as God pro
pared It for him.
The excessive refinements of foods
takes out of them the vital elements
our bodies need, and then In the form
<}f every nostrum under the s
a going to do about it—
today? *’
MEXICAN TROOPS READY
FOR ACTION IN CASE OF
NEW OUTBREAKS j
Listen to Reason
With the wisdom of a sage, Poor Richard said: “If you
will not hear Reason, she will surely rap your knuckles.”
The advertising you find in this paper is 100 per cent
reason. Ignore its messages, and you neglect opportunity,
overlook vital information and put yourself in a way to get
your knuckles severely rapped. Heed them, and you cannot
fail to profit.
Sometimes, the advertisements keep you from making an
unwise purchase by pointing out the reasons why one ar
ticle suits you better than another.
And ALWAYS they identify for you goods of unques
tioned value. When a store or manufacturing concern puts
its name on goods and tells you about them, you may be
sure that they worth consideration. It does not pay to
advertise merchandise that is not good.
IT’S WORTH WHILE TO HEED THE VOICE OF
REASON. READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS!
extended meeting yesterday morning ,, ,
. . ,. . preparation to enter the
and immediately called on its ad-.
herenta to strike as a sign of mourn. “If we exact further payment in
ing for eight of its members whs j money we will be demanding that
killed during the disturbance, the allies pay the debt they owe us
and whose bodies are lying in state. twice over- It may be said by some
confederation headquarters. The j ti\»t while this is a generous solution
strike will continue until today at |®n our part of some of the difficulties
The victims of the disorders of Europe, it is not right that the
will be buried to-day. nation should forego a contractual
The radical elements which com- th4t the government is the
prised the bulk of the demonstrators ! trustee of the funds of its people
Thursday night, assumed a defiant|» n d mu,t wfeguard the snanefal
attitude yesterday. Small groups of interests of its citizens. But if ths
them appeared in various sections of J people themselves demand it, they
the city and shouted invectives j b *ve the r/ght to sacrifice their own
against the city administration. It j interests in view of a higher end 1
Mexico City, Dec. 2.—The federal
troops were held in barracks yester
day in anticipation of another demon
stration similar to that of Thursday
night, when seventeen persons were
killed and more than sixty injured
in consequence of the police firing
upon a mob which was attempting
to storm the city hall in anger over
the shortage of water.
The Confederation of Labor which
staged Thursday night’s parade ol
protest against the aldermen, held
Hart Schaffner &
Marx dress clothes
are popular
Men know they’re right
in every detail or the
label of these makers
wouldn’t be in them. We’ll
show you many models at
very reasonable prices.
PHONE 300
Headquarters for Hart Schaffner and Marx Good Clothes
try have been In vain.
“A great toll,” he aald, “was paid by
the allies In the war when we were in
the (I
was considered unlikely that last possible of realisation,
night would see a repetition of the “We have already manlfeated this
disturbances as the killing of their spirit on * small scale in our history
companions has aroused the labor |The indemnity given to us by China
organizations to a high pitch of on account of tha Boxer rebellion
resentment. It was reported yesteiw was found to be larger than the
day evening that an attempt was 1 claims of our American eitixens.
made at noon to storm the pumping Consequently, we returned $13,000,-
plant) at Peralvillo, suburb of the 000 to China,
capital, but that the attacking party j “A similar action now on our part
was repulsed by the police. i would not only give new courage and The chain or road gangs and the state
is that of a spectator. We
only nation of the world that
with striking power, and yet
satisfied to look on.
"We may delay and delay and de
lay, taking those steps assuring
that the World War was a war
end wars until it is too late to avert
such a war, and too late to guard
ourselves from participation in it,
or from the disastrous effects upon
us and upon the generations yet to
come, of another world
GEORGIA PRISON
INMATES INCREASE
The department of commerce
^Washington announces that according
return* received by the bureau of
tha census the number of persons con
fined In prison, chain or road gangs,
jails, police stations, etc., in the
of Georgia on July 1, 1922, was 8,421,
as against-7,420, on July 1, 1117. Of
the total for 1922, 587 were reported
for the state prison farm, 5,604 for
100 chain or road gangs. 1,925 for 120
$ounty Jails, 802 for twsnty-flv* cities,
gnd three for two other institutions.
Late yesterday afternoon all the hope to Europe, but would bring to
members of the city council joined our American people again the same
with Alonzo :Romero, president of elevation of spirit which we experi-
the council, in declaring they would enced in the year of 1917 and 1018
not resign office on the demand of j during the World War. It is a great
the radicals unless forced to by the day in the history of mankind when
federal authorities.
PRINCETON PROFESSOR
THINKS U. S. SHOULD
“If we are wise enough and great
enough to do this tiring we should
CANCEL PART WAR DEBT jrosity through the demand that ths
nations of Eurppe should 'balancs
Houston, Texas, Dec. 2.—Declaring their budgets so as to wipe out ths
that America ahould cancel at least present annual deficits. They cannot
part of her war debt from the allies In do this, however, without a very
order to make sure that the World War substantial reduction of all their
ear to end wars, John Grier army and navy appropriations.
Hibbon president of Princeton Unlver-1 M l do not know whether to regard
slty. In an address at Rice Institute ft as a tragedy or a comedy that we
here yesterday, asserted that “bow U .hould la the present world situation
tha time tor the United States to gaage Jbe represented at the various confer-
prison farm form the state peniten
tiary system and are operated under
state control.
The returns were obtained In re
sponse to a circular of Inquiry which
the bureau of the census mailed I
various Institutions, as a preliminary
to the decennial census of prlsonera
which will be taken next year.
whether the war sacrifices of Ik* o
i abroad by <
CRANBERRY SAUCE
Seeded Raisins, Ouster
Raisins' Figs—All kinds of
nuts, Mrashmallows.
J. R. Evans
Phone 12S
Wall Papering,
INTERIOR DECORATING
PAINTING
TINTING
MIRROR SILVERING
David S. Pittman
518 West Clay Street
PHONE 533-J.
ijERSfy
F.B. Harris
Company
Distributers
Thomasville, Ga